1234: Not Going to E3 2013? Here’s What to Wear

Jun 05 -- Style FileAre you a video game developer?

Or perhaps a programmer, graphic designer or other exec working in the video game industry?

Or perhaps you’re a video game journalist?

If “yes,” then it’s entirely possible that, much as you would like to go to the upcoming Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) — the premier trade show for the computer and video game industry — it’s just not practical for you to do so. Perhaps you don’t have the finances to subsidise a trip there. Perhaps your company won’t pay for you to go. Perhaps, if you’re a journalist, you actually prefer covering it on the home front.

It’s a terrific opportunity to sit back and watch what’s hot in your market without actually having to get hot and sweaty in those crowded exhibition halls.

If you’ve not been to E3 before, you know the challenge. How do you remain comfortable working far away from the convention centre while simultaneously maintaining a professional attitude?

Many people who are not going to E3 prefer to keep a low profile, wearing casual clothes like a baggy t-shirt and jeans. But in an industry increasingly based around remote working, it’s worthwhile to spend some time thinking about how what you wear can have a significant impact on your comfort level, while simultaneously allowing you a certain degree of decency if the postman comes to the door with that package you’ve been expecting for a while.

jpeg-1My suggestion for the gentlemen is this rather fetching Marks & Spencer stretch cotton “Grumpy and Grumpier” two-pack of trunks, with a design copyrighted by Disney. For just £15 GBP, these trunks offer a soft, comfortable fit and add variety to your underwear drawer while simultaneously accurately reflecting your mental state at not being invited to any of those E3 parties.

The trunks include an elasticated waistband for added comfort while consuming entire “sharing bags” of crisps at your desk, and also have a keyhole fly opening for easy access when the beer you’re drinking has its inevitable effect on your bladder.

jpeg-2The more modest man-in-his-home office may wish to pair the trunks with this cotton-rich towelling dressing gown. Made from soft and comfortable cotton-rich fabric, this dressing gown has a rich texture for rapidly absorbing moisture, making it ideal for after a bath or shower, or just if you’re rather sweaty. It is getting quite warm out, after all. It’s also snag-resistant, meaning it stays looking newer for longer.

This product was rated 4.5 out of 5 by people who cared enough to rate it on Marks & Spencer’s website, leading some to refer to it as “the Citizen Kane of towelling robes” — an accolade sure to be plastered all over adverts for the robe soon.

For the ladies… I don’t know, wear whatever the fuck you want, and don’t let Forbes tell you what to do.

1183: Suit Up

Page_1I was exceedingly bored today, so rather than sitting around in my pants as I usually do I decided to put on my suit for no reason other than for the hell of it.

Well, there were a few reasons, to be honest. I’m not a particularly vain type, as anyone who has met me and seen the state of my hair (both -cut and facial) will attest, but I’ve never quite been comfortable with my “look”, for want of a better word. I don’t really have a signature “look” unless you count “jeans and (usually) geeky T-shirt” as a “look”, and I’m not sure I do, because that involves pretty much the minimum amount of effort possible that enables you to go outside and not be arrested.

I also wanted to see if there was any truth to the pseudo-psychological theory that if you dress “professionally” you’ll be in a more “worky” frame of mind.

I’ve also been watching a lot of Friends recently and noted that most of the male characters in that spend a lot of time wearing suits. (This was, of course, followed up by the character of Barney in How I Met Your Mother, who makes wearing a suit into an explicit character trait rather than something that “just is”.)

So what were my conclusions?

Umm… to be honest, I’m not sure I really have anything particularly… conclusive. That said, wearing a suit is more comfortable than I remember, though it can get a bit hot and stuffy if you keep the jacket on.

Did I feel more “confident” and “professional”, though?

I can’t really say with any certainty. This is perhaps largely to do with the fact that I put it on once I had done all my paid work for the day and was taking a wander into town to sit in various coffee shops and post things on Games Are Evil then work on my game a bit. To my credit, I did get quite a lot done, but I think this may be more to do with the amount of coffee I consumed and my surroundings than what I was covering myself up with. Or perhaps it was part of the whole equation.

Oh well. I can’t say it was a particularly unpleasant experience, anyway. And since I’m working from home and not in an office, it’s about the only airing this suit gets apart from weddings (yes, people I know who got married in the last year, I wore the same suit to your wedding that I “just wear” or put on for job interviews) or job interviews (yes, people who interview me, I wear the same suit to your interview that I wear to my friends’ weddings) so I might as well give it a day out every so often.

Am I going to “suit up” as my “new look” though? Probably not. I have far too many geeky T-shirts that I actually like showing off. (No-one has recognised my Deadly Premonition one yet, frustratingly.)

#oneaday, Day 196: Things The World Needs Significantly Less Of

The world is full of “stuff”. Some of it is good. Examples of good stuff include trifle, Spotify, refrigerators, kung po chicken, those marker pens that smell of fruit, pianos (so long as they are in tune), friends, hot chocolate with whipped cream, people who are nice, digital cameras, the Squadron of Shame, Civilization IV, headphones with comfortable earpieces, that Original Mint Source shower gel (so long as you don’t get it on your bellend or up your arse), lamb tikka dhansak, Twitter, gin and tonic and, of course, the music from Space Channel 5.

But there are just as many—if not more—things that the world really doesn’t need any more of. In fact, some of these things I’d argue the world doesn’t really need at all. Because, in many cases, we got along just fine without them before they were invented.

Here is a selection of things the world could do with significantly less of.

1. Redundant information signs on motorways

“QUEUE CAUTION,” says the ungrammatical sign in bold, orange, backlit capital letters. Your car is not moving. Not because you stopped to read the sign. No, your car is stopped because it’s in a queue. You were aware of the fact your car was in a queue long before a sign informed you of this fact. As it happens, since the sign informing you that yes, you are in a queue appeared approximately two miles after the queue started, it feels somewhat like it’s mocking you. As such, you decide to shout at the sign.

The sign does not respond.

2. Suit jackets with fake pockets

Clothes either have pockets or they don’t. If you’re a girl and you like wearing pretty dresses, chances are you don’t have pockets very often. As such, you may well carry a handbag for the express purpose of carrying around your “stuff”. Said pretty dresses don’t tend to have pretend pockets for some unspecified purpose.

Gentlemen, on the other hand, are used to having pockets. The typical gentleman’s attire features pockets on the trousers at the very least, and jackets usually have pockets as well. So when a suit that looks like it has pockets but doesn’t comes along, that’s a sure-fire ticket to frustration city. Particularly when you try and put something in the jacket pocket instead of the trouser pocket because when you put things in your trouser pockets your trousers fall down because you forgot to bring a belt and you can’t put anything in the jacket pocket because it isn’t actually a pocket despite looking like one and ARRRGH HOLD THIS FOR A MINUTE WILL YOU?

3. People who talk about fashion as if it’s a science

Shut up. Just stop talking bollocks. People can wear whatever they want. Most people have a pretty good idea that wearing something in a fluorescent colour is probably going to make you stand out a bit, and wearing strappy shoes with big heels may well make you 1) fall over and 2) have hurty feet. When some jumped-up hussy comes on TV explaining to everyone that the particular shade of brown you see in front of you is the “perfect shade for summer” (despite it being purple last year, and yellow the year before) everyone should yell, as one, “FUCK OFF”.

Fashion is not a science. You know what is a science? Science.

4. The adjectival phrase “must-have”

If you took the term “must-have” at face value and immediately purchased everything described as such, you would be very poor indeed. “Must-have” items often tend to be expensive and/or pointless, and there is some crossover with the world of people who talk about fashion as if it’s a science.

No, that handbag is not a “must-have” item. It is something that someone rich who likes gaudy silver handbags might enjoy purchasing.

Genuinely “must-have” items for acceptable functioning in modern society include: water, underpants, trousers/skirts, shirts/blouses/t-shirts, shoes, a toilet (arguable, given the stench coming from some doorways in Southampton on a Friday night), soap, deodorant, food of some description.

5. Extremism

If you are a terrorist, you are quite possibly an extremist. You hold an extreme viewpoint, and in your case, you’re prepared to die for it.

But extremism isn’t just about terrorism. It’s also about the people who bring out the tired old “Britain is full!” line when talking about immigration. The people who believe that all Muslims are terrorists. The people who use the phrase “YOU’RE IN ENGLAND, SPEAK ENGLISH”. And on the other end of the spectrum, people who describe anyone with an opposing viewpoint to their own as a “Nazi”. People who go on a march for a cause which isn’t entirely clear to anyone except themselves. People who protest for the sake of protesting, rather than actually having something worthwhile to protest about.

All of you, just stop it. Shut up. You both sound ridiculous. And as for you, Captain Terrorist? Attention-seeking of the highest order. Grow up.

6. Companies whose purpose their own employees can’t explain

I’ve told this story a number of times before, but there was a time when I did some temping for a local “loss adjusting” company. On a side note, this was the only job I’ve had which literally bored me to tears on several occasions. And that’s not an exaggeration.

Anyway, the point is this: this company dealt with issues so boring that no-one else would ever want anything to do with them, let alone have a burning desire to enter that profession. But the sheer string of companies that charged exorbitant rates per hour that their “cases” went through was ridiculous. In one case relating to tree-related subsidence on a property adjacent to a Transport For London-owned railway, the clients made a claim to the insurance company, who contacted the loss adjusters, who sent in some engineers to look at the damage, who sent in some builders to give a quote for repairs who hired some solicitors to sue Transport for London for the costs and then hired some draftsmen to write up said costs who then hired some other solicitors to recover the costs from someone else who then… I fell asleep by this point.

Ask an employee of a company like this “what do you do?” and if they spend more than three seconds thinking or going “umm”, then that company doesn’t really need to exist.

7. Doorstep salesmen

“Hi! Would you like to…”

“No. Goodbye.”

*SLAM*

There are many, many more things the world could do with significantly less of. Evil people. Cheaters. Assholes. Murderers. Men who walk into shops with their shirts off. R&B singers. Jedward fans. Types of cigarette. Brands of bottled water. Rapists. People who flash their fullbeams at you when you’re in the right-hand lane going 90+ mph overtaking people on your left. Onions. County council employees. People who use the word “fuckin'” in spoken sentences the same way people use “lol” when writing. People who use “lol” as punctuation. Aniseed.

I could go on. But I won’t.